2010-09-08
| Rate This Article: | Add This Article To: |
To view the full article in its entirety, please visit eWeek: Dell to Halt Windows XP System Shipments
Dell and other PC vendors will stop shipping systems with Windows XP Professional or Windows XP Home installed, beginning Oct. 22. Dell customers will no longer have Windows XP as an option starting in late September, although the manufacturer plans to continue Windows XP driver support through December 2012.
"After the Oct. 22 date, qualified customers will still be able to get systems with Windows XP … through Dell's Custom Factory Integration service," said a Sept. 7 post on Direct2Dell, the company's corporate blog. "Otherwise, customers who order new machines with Windows 7 Professional or higher can run XP applications in Windows XP mode."
Microsoft had previously announced in April 2008 that OEMs would no longer be able to preinstall Windows XP Home on new netbook PCs starting Oct. 22. That follows the company's announcement of the end of Windows XP Service Pack 2 support on July 13. Extended support for Windows XP SP3 is scheduled to end in April 2014, with no new updates or patches after that point.
"For a majority of our customers, they may not notice much change," Microsoft spokesperson Brandon LeBlanc posted June 9 on The Windows Blog. "Many PC makers have already been actively manufacturing and selling a broad set of Windows 7 notebooks since Windows 7 released in October 2009. In fact, according to NPD's Retail Tracking Service, by April 2010, 81 [percent] of netbook units sold at retail in the U.S. came with Windows 7 preinstalled."
|
![]() |
|


